Sympathy is likely to be in short supply for this year’s biggest discounters given they tend to be the same sellers scoring some of the highest prices.
Take Rockleigh,the Point Piper trophy home owned by medico specialistDr Philippa Harvey-Sutton. Before it to,it was being quietly offered for $100 million. So,ouch to the $20 million shortfall,but congratulations on scoring this financial year’s highest house price sale.
Just this week the award-winning designer residence Perpetua in Northbridge owned by venture capitalistJohn Riedl and his wifeDianne sold after a fairly big price adjustment.
The 1950s,Wilkinson Award-winning residence designed by architectDouglas Snelling and later redesigned byAlec Tzannes was listed last year for $15 million to $16.5 million,but when it didn’t sell it was relisted anew,this time with Ray White’s Stewart Gordon and Geoff Smith for $10 million.
That did the job because it sold this week for more than that amount.
Former mining billionaireNathan Tinkler copped a 46 per cent discount from his initial $30 million hopes on his Sapphire Beach estate north of Coffs Harbour.
There was an offer of $25 million early in the campaign,but when that fell over he resorted to a $16 million sale to corporate interests linked toJamie Craven,father of crypto billionaireEd Craven.
Anthony Tzaneros,of the ACFS freight family,and interior designer Poppy O’Neil Tzaneros had initially hoped for $18 million for their Bellevue Hill designer digs,but from rag tradersCarol and Steven Moss.
The list goes on. Billionaire former garbo Ian Malouf was no doubt channelling 2023 when he listed two of his spare beachfront weekenders at Palm Beach for a combined $65 million. After all,he had renovated both houses since buying them for $20 million and $18.6 million each a couple of years earlier.
The more expensive of the two sold recently to snack food businesswomanLenka Dransfield for what the agent’s advice said was $25 million but settled on title records at $18 million. The Palm Springs-style house next door,Gidget,is still for sale with a $23 million guide,despite recent reports in the News Corp press that it sold.
EnvironmentalistGeoff Cousins and authorDarleen Bungey had hoped for $30 million for their Point Piper home but pocketed $23 million from former ASX chiefDominic Stevens and his wifeEmma.
Former tech entrepreneur-turned-clean energy investorSean Neylon and his wifePhoebe copped a loss in Byron Bay,as didThe Block’sShelley Craft given the vendor finance that helped facilitate the deal. The Neylons’ corporate interests paid $9 million in 2022 but two years later,and with debts still weighing on title,it was sold for $7.4 million toAmanda Rohrig,wife of millionaire builderGlenn Rohrig.
Still in Byron Bay,film producerClaire Jensz also discounted her Wategos Beach home. Listed for $25 million in September,it sold for $17.12 million to Boost Juice entrepreneur andSurvivor Australiareality TV contestantJanine Allis.
Even the leading family behind the fundamentalist Christian sect Exclusive Brethren revealed a level of market softness in Dural.Gareth Hales,son of the church’s global leaderBruce D. Hales,paid $9.5 million for the luxury acreage in 2022. It sold recently for $8.45 million. You do the sums.
The new price is less
Getting the price right clearly matters. HeiressFrancesca Packer Barham has read the market and adjusted expectations on her Darlinghurst sub-penthouse.
What was pitched at $35 million in a press release last November is now listed exclusively with Highland Property’s David Malouf for more than $30 million.
ACFS freight industry bossArthur Tzaneros listed his Vaucluse digs for $55 million,and a year later it is an off-market offering through Highland’s Malouf for $45 million all while sources say it is being leased out.
BusinessmanGlenn Botha is still marketing his Bayview mansion Chateau Narla. What was $20 million to $22 million a year ago is now $14 million.
And the landmark Leuralla mansion in Leura at the Blue Mountains is no longer expected to sell in the $17 million to $18 million range. The grand 1914-built residence owned by four generations of the Evatt family was passed in on a vendor bid recently at $9 million,and is on offer in line with that through Christie’s Darren Curtis and McGrath’s Craig Pontey.